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Kate Hill 
Women and museums 1850–1914 
Modernity and the gendering of knowledge

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Cover of Kate Hill: Women and museums 1850–1914 (ePUB)

This book recovers the significant contribution made by women to museums, not just in obvious roles such as workers, but also as donors, visitors, volunteers and patrons. It suggests that women persistently acted to domesticate the museum, by importing domestic objects and domestic regimes of value, as well as by making museums more welcoming to children, and even by stressing the importance of housekeeping at the museum. At the same time, women sought ‘masculine’ careers in science and curatorship, but found such aspirations hard to achieve; their contribution tended to be kept within clear, feminised areas.
The book will be of interest to those working on gender, culture, or museums in the period. It sheds new light on women’s material culture and material strategies, education and professional careers, and leisure practices. It will form an important historical context for those working in contemporary museum studies.

€33.99
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Table of Content

Introduction
1. Inside the museum: including or excluding women?
2. Outside the museum: women as donors and vendors
3. Outside the museum: women’s donations, materiality and the museum object
4. Women visiting museums
5. Women as patrons: the limits of agency?
6. New disciplines: archaeology, anthropology and women in museums
7. Ruskin, women and museums: service and salvage
Conclusion
Index

About the author

Kate Hill is Principal Lecturer in History at the University of Lincoln
Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 288 ● ISBN 9781526113412 ● File size 1.8 MB ● Publisher Manchester University Press ● City Manchester ● Country GB ● Published 2016 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 5370089 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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